There are a considerable number of papers dedicated
to the post%Cold War migration
phenomenon at least from two main reasons. One argu
ment may consist in the positive trend
of immigration that was identified after the fall o
f the Berlin Wall and another in the fact that
the second important component of demographic dynam
ics is the international migration. As
Romanian demographer, Vladimir Trebici, argued in 1
991, immigration has the same
meaning with the birth for the destination country
and emigration represents the losses
1
.
In this framework, European Union is the best case
to study % a form of regional
integration that preserve the borders of the states
but offer the chance for a post%national
European citizenship and, in the same time, applies
the rules of the Schengen Area for some
of the Member States
2
. Even if one could ask himself/herself if this mig
ration inside EU can
be “international”, the existence of an European ci
tizenship does not affect this issue due to
the fact that migration is defined in correlation w
ith national borders. Thus, this paper brings
into attention the articles 13%15 of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
that state that:
everyone has the right to freedom of movement and r
esidence within the borders of each state
and to leave any country and to return
3
; everyone has the right to seek and to enjoy in ot
her
countries asylum from persecution
4
, and, the most important, everyone has the right t
o a
nationality
5
. These articles should be the corner%stone for the
entire process of managing